That's just not true, though; they each reflect light at wavelengths closer to each other than objects of other colours do compared to them, and consequently they look more similar to each other in terms of colour than objects of other colours do compared to them. The first is a material condition of the second and the second is the reason we refer to both as being grey, for our use of the word "grey". — Janus
The literal meaning of 'subsist' is nothing like what he's trying to convey here. — Wayfarer
So light with a wavelength of 650nm is the same colour as light with a wavelength of 651nm because they're very similar wavelengths? — Michael
Bowdlerising his argument, it simply is not the case that the grey of a cloud and the grey of this laptop have something in common - apart from our use of the word "grey". — Banno
It's the other way around. Every negation holds within it its own assertion. — Harry Hindu
It makes no sense to say that language is in the world but separate from the world. — Harry Hindu
What does it mean to be about something? Aboutness is a causal relationship. — Harry Hindu
The idea that we are stuck and need a conceptual transformation to move forward seems quite common in the field. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It's fairly speculative to think what Kant might think of our modern scientific world, ultimately. Especially given the diversity of opinions on Kant's thoughts on teleological judgment and how that sort of offers a way for reasonable individuals to still be, well... spiritual. Or whatever. — Moliere
it is one of the things that has become apparent through 20th C science itself. — Wayfarer
You're just talking out of your comfortable assumed realism. Science suggests otherwise. Anyway - duty calls, I have a commercial assignment to start, so I'll bow out for now. Cheers. — Wayfarer
Kastrup (a different idealist thinker) simply argues that all we experience is real - it just isn't physical. So signs and fossils and DNA and an oncoming bus - are all important readings on a dashboard that hold real consequences. They are mind when observed from a different perspective. But this stuff is very elusive and cannot be demonstrated other than undermining materialist ontologies. — Tom Storm
They're not, though. That is the whole point of the 'observer problem'. That is why Einstein had to ask his friend Michael Besso, 'doesn't the moon continue to exist when nobody's looking at it?' — Wayfarer
Reality is not 'just an experience'. It's a constructive activity which synthesises elements of sensory data with the categories of the understanding to generate the phenomenal experience. — Wayfarer
He's not saying that. I don't think you've taken in what he's saying. — Wayfarer
The same thing is true as apples and the moon and the sun and the universe. Just like you have your own headache, you have your own moon. But I assume it’s relevantly similar to mine. That’s an assumption that could be false, but that’s the source of my communication, and that’s the best we can do in terms of public physical objects and objective science. — Donald Hoffman
Through reason and experimental observation. — Wayfarer
Let’s begin with perception. I experience the physical world though my five senses: sight, taste, touch, hearing, and smell. I do not possess a special “tree-sensing” sense. So how can I experience a tree? The answer is I do not directly experience the tree. Rather, my eyes see patches of brown and green; my fingers tell me the brown patches are rough and the green patches are smooth. My mind retrieves the idea “tree” to explain what my senses are telling me. Tree is a mental representation which describes what I experience. (We may suppose a newborn infant only sees patches of light. Over time, the infant deduces the ideas of object, object permanence, and eventually tree.) — Art48
Language is not separate from the world. What makes language so special as to have a special meeting with the world while everything else in the world lacks this kind of meeting with the world? I have to learn to understand language just like I have to learn to ride a bike, or how babies are made. The world and our perceptions of it precedes any use of language as language must be perceived in the world to make any use of it. — Harry Hindu
Truth is where the world and language meet. Some of our beliefs are true, some not. Not just anything will do. — Banno
No, rightness is where the world and language meet, and rightness is not about truth and falsity but coherence of fit. What fits and what does not , and in what way, depends on lour purposes. — Joshs
We don't, for instance, consider the dirt the tree is on to be part of the tree, but nothing in nature should prevent us from doing this. — Manuel
And I don't think there is an unbridgeable gap between human identity and the natural world. Human identity is something we have to deal with, it's a phenomenon of nature, realized in human beings, of which science can say very little about. — Manuel
It's thus true that there's milk in the fridge and no-one knows there is.
That true statement is unknowable. Why? Because anyone coming to know that there's milk in the fridge (say, by looking) would render the statement false (since the second conjunct would be false). The statement doesn't change from an unknown truth to a known truth. It changes from an unknown truth to a known falsity. — Andrew M
Possibly. What's your reasoning? — Luke
The move from unknown to unknowable is given in the "independent result" in lines 4-9 of the SEP proof. The logic of that reductio argument is beyond my understanding, and I would welcome someone to explain it. However, I don't dispute its conclusion. — Luke
Second, if we didn't have that proof (or others that I may not be aware of), then we wouldn't know whether there were unknowable truths or not. — Andrew M
The reason is that knowing "p & ~Kp" would entail knowing p and also not knowing p which is impossible.. — Andrew M
Is the truth of the proposition that there are unknowable propositions itself unknowable? We might want to say that it is, because if there are unknowable propositions then we could never know there are, just because they are unknowable.
But then it would follow that there is at least one unknowable truth, that it is unknowable as to whether there are unknowable truths; and that is a contradiction, because it would also follow that we know that there is at least one unknowable truth. — Janus
1) Heidegger: we cannot talk about objective things, because we are always immersed in the objectivity we talk about. — Angelo Cannata
Subjectivity needs to be conceived as something subject to change, becoming, so, we cannot give any stable definition of it. — Angelo Cannata
The perspective is, then, experience; the difference is whether or not there is any.
Ahhhh....but the technicalities. That’s where the fun is, ne c’est pas? When does “something” become cup? Somewhere in that theoretical exposition, will reside the possible misgivings. — Mww
just to avoid there being intrinsic properties and I can't see why. — Isaac
The proposition "it is raining" is true if and only if it is raining
If the proposition "it is raining" is true then the proposition "it is raining" exists
If it is raining then the proposition "it is raining" exists
If the proposition "it is raining" does not exist then it is not raining — Michael
All I was looking for was your idea of why we can say we are modeling a cup, or from different perspective, we can say we are modeling “something”. — Mww
Some food for thought:
T(x) ≔ x is true
T("p") ↔ p
T("p") → ∃"p"
p → ∃"p" — Michael
I agree. Do you have an idea of what that different perspective might be? — Mww
I think there is a sense in which we can say we see the cup and another sense in which we can say that we see a model of the cup. — Janus
But for that second sense, I can't see what process you'd be using. Modelling the cup is part of the process of seeing, so to see the model, do you model the model? — Isaac
